This research article published by Water Alternatives, 2019
This introduction is a reflexive piece on the notion of farmer-led irrigation development and its
politics. It highlights the way the varied contributions to the Special Issue support a shared perspective on farmerled irrigation development as a process whereby farmers drive the establishment, improvement, and/or
expansion of irrigated agriculture, often in interaction with other actors. We analyse how the terminology is used
and reproduced, and what it means for our understanding of irrigation policy and practices in sub-Saharan Africa.
A central tenet of our argument is that farmer-led irrigation development is inherently political, as it questions the
primacy of engineering and other expert knowledges regarding the development of agricultural water use
practices in Africa as well as the privileging of formal state planning or technical solutions. We show how
mainstream understanding of farmers’ engagement focuses on (1) regulation and control, (2) profitability, and (3)
technical efficiency. We demonstrate how these three perspectives have contributed to depoliticised readings of
farmer-led irrigation (development), which has been essential to the ability of the terminology to travel and find
global allies. Second, we explore the paradox of the invisibility of farmer-led irrigation development in national
policies and practices. We discuss practical and political reasons underlying this silence and point out that there
are important advantages for irrigators in not being visible. In conclusion we highlight what can be gained from
adopting an explicitly political analysis of the processes through which farmers engage in irrigation on their own
terms.